|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
While intercity passenger transport counts for about 2% of the
total passenger transport volume the share of the total passenger
kilometers traveled is estimated more than one third. In many
countries the major part of intercity transport is performed by car
and air and as a result, the contribution to the carbon footprint
is substantially higher than the share of overall passenger
transport performance. This creates a challenge to develop a
sustainable organization of intercity transport which requires a
true joint effort of policy makers, industry sectors and
households. This presupposes that all options for reducing the
carbon footprint of the transport modes - car, air and rail - are
fully exploited through modern propulsion technology, use of
regenerative energy and efficient organization of transport
processes. Basic conditions for meeting this requirement are an
incentive compatible public framework of regulation, taxation,
charging and education, the private willingness to adjust to new
behavioral patterns and a consequent push of technological progress
towards energy and CO2 savings. This book begins with an
international comparison of intercity transport and the current
state of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) of this transport segment.
A focus is given to comparing the situation in the EU, the US and
Japan while describing the more recent development of intercity
transport in China, followed by an analysis of intercity transport
policies and their contribution to meet the global climate change
issues. This book will be of interest to researchers in
transportation economics and policy, as well as civil engineering
and planning.
Transportation Amid Pandemics: Practices and Policies is the first
reference on pandemics (especially COVID-19) in the context of
transport, logistics, and supply chains. This book investigates the
relationships between pandemics and transport and evaluates impacts
of COVID-19 and effects of policy responses to address them. It
explores how to recover from pandemics, reveals governance for
immediate policy responses and future innovations, suggests
strategies for post-pandemic sustainable and resilient development,
shares lessons of COVID-19 policymaking across countries, and
discusses how to transform transport systems for a better future.
Transportation Amid Pandemics offers transport researchers and
policymakers the scientific evidence they need to support their
decisions and solutions against pandemics. "Curiosity and research
brought me to discover an excellent handbook covering the relations
between COVID 19 and the transport reality. It is called
"Transportation amid Pandemics -Lessons Learned from COVID-19" and
has been published this year. 2022 happens to be the year of the
50th anniversary of the first report to The Club of Rome "The
Limits to Growth". The new book covers evidences from all over the
world, and offers policy recommendations from a great variety of
perspectives". Ernst Ulrich von Weizsaecker
Coordination of land use and transport is one of the most important
issues in urban planning from the viewpoint of transport
infrastructure supply and amenity in urban space. There has been,
therefore, much research conducted in the fields of empirical
analysis and theoretical and mathematical modelling of the
mechanisms of land use-transport interaction. The members of the
Transport and Land Use SIG (Special Interest Group) of the WCTRS
(World Conference on Transport Research Society) have conducted
extensive research in these fields. Leading on from the activities
of ISGLUTI (International Study Group on Land Use-Transport
Interaction) chaired by Dr. Vernon Webster, its output was
published as a book "Land Use-Transport Interaction / Policies and
Models." Concurrently with this ongoing research, energy
consumption in the transport sector has been increasing rapidly and
become a crucial issue from the viewpoint of global environmental
conservation. An emerging research need is to examine and
structurally identify the mechanisms of the influence of land
use-transport interaction on energy consumption and environmental
damage, both locally and globally. The SIG held a seminar in
December 1993 in Blackheath, Australia which was the first meeting
where world class land use-transport experts gathered to discuss
the above topic, covering fact finding, scenario analysis and
modelling. This book contains selected papers from the seminar. The
Australian Government, CSIRO (Australia) and the Asahi Glass
Foundation (Japan) supported the seminar. The book was edited with
an enormous and patient help by Dr. Omar Osman at Nagoya
University.
Disaster Resilient Cities: Concepts and Practical Examples
discusses natural disasters, their complexity, and the exploration
of different ways of thinking regarding the resilience of
structures. The book provides a blueprint for structural designers
to better prepare structures for all types of natural hazards
during the design stage. Brief and readable, this book analyzes
various examples of disaster damage from earthquakes, tsunamis, and
floods, together with their causal mechanisms. Practical methods to
plan and design structures based on their regions, cities, as well
as the particular countermeasures are also included for study.
Transportation contributes to roughly a fifth of greenhouse gas
emissions, and as a growing sector of the economy, its contribution
to climate change, if remained unchanged, could even grow. This is
particularly true in the developing world, where the growth rates
of air and ship transport are expected to exceed those of the EU,
and worldwide objectives to curb greenhouse gas emissions by 2050
by sixty to eighty percent could be placed in serious jeopardy.
This book addresses the key issues of controlling transportation
growth and identifying and implementing measures that would
significantly reduce the emissions of greenhouse gases from
transport while maintaining its vital role in generating prosperity
and mobility for future generations. This book describes the
challenge that transport constitutes today as well as its role in
the future for climate policy. It will discuss and provide hands-on
suggestions for transportation policy that will mitigate the
greenhouse gas emissions from transport. The book is organized into
five parts. Part One presents an overview of transport and climate
policy in the context of the recent economic crisis. Part Two
examines the problems and proposed solutions for curbing emissions
from transport in industrialized countries while Parts Three and
Four deal with the developing world, with a particular focus on
India and China. Part Five discusses tested solutions and provides
policy recommendations making this book of interest to a broad
audience of both policy-makers and academics concerned with the
role of transport in reducing global climate change.
While intercity passenger transport counts for about 2% of the
total passenger transport volume the share of the total passenger
kilometers traveled is estimated more than one third. In many
countries the major part of intercity transport is performed by car
and air and as a result, the contribution to the carbon footprint
is substantially higher than the share of overall passenger
transport performance. This creates a challenge to develop a
sustainable organization of intercity transport which requires a
true joint effort of policy makers, industry sectors and
households. This presupposes that all options for reducing the
carbon footprint of the transport modes - car, air and rail - are
fully exploited through modern propulsion technology, use of
regenerative energy and efficient organization of transport
processes. Basic conditions for meeting this requirement are an
incentive compatible public framework of regulation, taxation,
charging and education, the private willingness to adjust to new
behavioral patterns and a consequent push of technological progress
towards energy and CO2 savings. This book begins with an
international comparison of intercity transport and the current
state of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) of this transport segment.
A focus is given to comparing the situation in the EU, the US and
Japan while describing the more recent development of intercity
transport in China, followed by an analysis of intercity transport
policies and their contribution to meet the global climate change
issues. This book will be of interest to researchers in
transportation economics and policy, as well as civil engineering
and planning.
Transportation contributes to roughly a fifth of greenhouse gas
emissions, and as a growing sector of the economy, its contribution
to climate change, if remained unchanged, could even grow. This is
particularly true in the developing world, where the growth rates
of air and ship transport are expected to exceed those of the EU,
and worldwide objectives to curb greenhouse gas emissions by 2050
by sixty to eighty percent could be placed in serious jeopardy.
This book addresses the key issues of controlling transportation
growth and identifying and implementing measures that would
significantly reduce the emissions of greenhouse gases from
transport while maintaining its vital role in generating prosperity
and mobility for future generations. This book describes the
challenge that transport constitutes today as well as its role in
the future for climate policy. It will discuss and provide hands-on
suggestions for transportation policy that will mitigate the
greenhouse gas emissions from transport. The book is organized into
five parts. Part One presents an overview of transport and climate
policy in the context of the recent economic crisis. Part Two
examines the problems and proposed solutions for curbing emissions
from transport in industrialized countries while Parts Three and
Four deal with the developing world, with a particular focus on
India and China. Part Five discusses tested solutions and provides
policy recommendations making this book of interest to a broad
audience of both policy-makers and academics concerned with the
role of transport in reducing global climate change.
Coordination of land use and transport is one of the most important
issues in urban planning from the viewpoint of transport
infrastructure supply and amenity in urban space. There has been,
therefore, much research conducted in the fields of empirical
analysis and theoretical and mathematical modelling of the
mechanisms of land use-transport interaction. The members of the
Transport and Land Use SIG (Special Interest Group) of the WCTRS
(World Conference on Transport Research Society) have conducted
extensive research in these fields. Leading on from the activities
of ISGLUTI (International Study Group on Land Use-Transport
Interaction) chaired by Dr. Vernon Webster, its output was
published as a book "Land Use-Transport Interaction / Policies and
Models." Concurrently with this ongoing research, energy
consumption in the transport sector has been increasing rapidly and
become a crucial issue from the viewpoint of global environmental
conservation. An emerging research need is to examine and
structurally identify the mechanisms of the influence of land
use-transport interaction on energy consumption and environmental
damage, both locally and globally. The SIG held a seminar in
December 1993 in Blackheath, Australia which was the first meeting
where world class land use-transport experts gathered to discuss
the above topic, covering fact finding, scenario analysis and
modelling. This book contains selected papers from the seminar. The
Australian Government, CSIRO (Australia) and the Asahi Glass
Foundation (Japan) supported the seminar. The book was edited with
an enormous and patient help by Dr. Omar Osman at Nagoya
University.
This book is an outcome of an international symposium:
Sustainability -Can We Design the Future of Human Life and the
Environment? which was held as a satellite event of the "Love the
Earth"-Expo 2005 (Aichi, Japan). Each chapter is based on the
lecture given by the following eminent researchers: Yoshinori
Ishii, Hans-Peter Durr, Yoshinori Yasuda, Minoru Kawada, Yasunobu
Iwasaka, Werner Rothengatter, Hisae Nakanishi, Yang Dongyuan, Lee
Schipper, Itsuo Kodama, and Yoshitsugu Hayashi.In the Part I titled
"A Sustainable Relationship between Nature and Humans", we discuss
what will become of fossil fuels and petroleum, and what kind of
indicators should be used to monitor the energy expended by human
society. We then discuss environmental impacts caused by different
civilizations and values on Nature and ethics, based on the
perspective of environmental archaeology and on the discussions by
Kunio Yanagita, the father of Japanese folklore study.The Part II
is titled and shows "International Conflict Concerning
Environmental Damage and Its Causes". The Asian dust (Kosa) is a
typical example of transboundary conflicts between nations. Another
example can be found in the EU's attempt to put in place a common
motorway toll system across EU countries having different
geographical and economic conditions. Finally, Part III covers the
opinions and further debates on sustainable future earth based on
the lectures in Parts I and II.We hope that great insights in this
book will come across to readers, and be of help in steering the
world towards a sustainable society in harmony with biosystems on
earth.
This book is an outcome of the symposium "Towards Earth Friendly
Use of Resources and Energy," organized by the Nagoya University
Center of Excellence Program "From Earth System Science to Basic
and Clinical Environmental Studies" and presents papers by four
eminent researchers. 1) Syukuro Manabe, who was honored in 2008 by
the Earth Hall of Fame Kyoto, together with Ms. Maathai and Ms.
Brundtland, describes the mechanisms of extreme weather, drought,
and flood that were caused by climate change due to CO2 emissions.
2) Ernst Ulrich von Weizsacker, co-chair of the Club of Rome,
describes "Factor 4 and 5" concepts such as technological progress
and redesigning socioeconomic systems, e.g. taxation, and stresses
the importance of humanity. 3) Hans-Peter Durr, ex-president of the
Max Planck Physics Institute as a successor of Heisenberg, explains
the mechanism of a living Earth sustained by accumulated energy
resources provided by the sun. He clarifies a point on preserving
the dynamic stability of minerals and life on Earth. 4) Shohei
Yonemoto, a well-known political scientist focusing on
sustainability, explains environmental politics and why the IPCC
and UNFCCC framework were established based on precaution
principles. He puts forward a new concept called futurology, which
considers population and food problems from a Malthusian standpoint
and incorporates them into issues such as climate change and
natural disasters. This book is written and based on a very simple
but concrete idea and provides the readers with a chance to
consider the shape of future Earth.
|
|